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The number of men getting vasectomies spiked during the Great Recession, rising one-third from 2006 to 2010, a study finds.

In 2006, 3.9 percent of men said they had had a vasectomy; in 2010, 4.4 percent reported having the surgery. That means an additional 150,000 to 180,000 men per year had vasectomies in each year of the recession.

That squares with earlier research that showed birth rates dropped during the recession, falling 4 percent between 2007 and 2009.

After the recession, man were making less money, were less likely to be working full time, and were less likely to have health insurance, according to the National Survey for Family Growth, which researchers at Weill Cornell Medical College used to come up with the vasectomy numbers.

Related NPR Stories

U.S. Birth Rate Drops; Do We Blame Recession Or Abstinence?

In Wake Of Recession, Immigrant Births Plunge

They reported their results Monday at the American Society for Reproductive Medicine conference in Hawaii.

OK, so what were women up to? The Weill Cornell researchers didn't look at this, but the survey did ask recession-era women about birth control, and there was no increase in the number of women who got birth control or had sterilization surgery from 2002.

Men typically aren't nearly as apt to embrace sterilization as a form of birth control as are women.

For women who use contraception, 26.6 percent chose tubal sterilization, which is permanent, compared to 27.5 percent for the pill, according to 2010 numbers from the Guttmacher Institute.

But just 10 percent of women said they're relying on their partner's vasectomy to avoid pregnancy, according to Guttmacher.

We'll have to stay tuned to see if guys' seeming embrace of vasectomy was just a recessionary blip, or if they really are saying no (or no mas) to fatherhood.

vasectomies

Birth Control

population

Great Recession

Men's Health

Barely 24 hours after a gunman attacked Parliament Hill in Ottawa, killing a soldier, lawmakers gave a standing ovation to Kevin Vickers, the legislature's sergeant-at-arms for reportedly firing the shots that took down the alleged assailant.

Vickers, 58, stood at attention and appeared close before the House of Commons as the applause wore on. He's being regarded as a hero in Canada for keeping the gunman from penetrating further into the parliamentary compound.

The CBC reports that Vickers has been identified as the one who shot the assailant inside the Hall of Honour, the main entrance to Centre Block.

The CBC says of Vickers that he became sergeant-at-arms in the House of Commons eight years ago after spending nearly three decades in the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, where he rose to the rank of superintendent.

"I just couldn't be prouder of him right now," John Vickers said of his brother.

When asked about Vickers's reported heroics, his cousin Keith said "It's Kevin being Kevin," according to CBC.

The House of Commons observed a moment of silence for Cpl. Nathan Cirillo, who was killed by the gunman as he stood a ceremonial guard at the National War Memorial near Parliament Hill. Members of Parliament also joined in singing the national anthem, O Canada.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper, addressing the assembly, thanked Vickers for his service. He said the objective of the attack was to instill fear and panic in Canada and to interrupt the business of government.

He called on Parliament to expedite plans to give Canada's security establishment more surveillance and detention powers.

canada parliament shooting

If you're midflight and the movie is terrible and the airline magazine crossword puzzle has already been done by someone else, the SkyMall catalog is the time-killer of last resort for the bored, boxed-in passenger.

Our Best-Selling Hot Dog Clock!

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"What time is it it's hot dog time! Each of these all-beef hot dogs contains a digital clock, accurate down to the minute. Tick-tock it's hot dog time." St. Martin's Press hide caption

itoggle caption St. Martin's Press

"What time is it it's hot dog time! Each of these all-beef hot dogs contains a digital clock, accurate down to the minute. Tick-tock it's hot dog time."

St. Martin's Press

SkyMall sells items that, under normal circumstances, you might never consider — like say, adult-size, unisex, one-piece Superman pajamas. But somehow, midflight, you find yourself wondering: Do I need a dog bed designed to look like an NCAA stadium?

Eight years ago, the San Francisco-based comedy group Kasper Hauser published Sky Maul: Happy Crap You Can Buy From The Plane, a catalog full of products like the "Pepper Self Spray" and the "Da Vinci Code Decoder Ring." And now comes Sky Maul 2: Where America Buys His Stuff. Kasper Hauser members Rob Baedeker and James and John Reichmuth join NPR's Robert Siegel to discuss some products that you can almost certainly live without.

Noise-Free Wind Chimes

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"One of the main drawbacks of wind chimes is the irritating sound that they make. ... Our patented quiet wind chimes use noise-canceling technology to take the 'chime' out of wind chime ... giving you peace of mind." St. Martin's Press hide caption

itoggle caption St. Martin's Press

"One of the main drawbacks of wind chimes is the irritating sound that they make. ... Our patented quiet wind chimes use noise-canceling technology to take the 'chime' out of wind chime ... giving you peace of mind."

St. Martin's Press

Interview Highlights

On their home improvement products, like the Cave Repainting Set and the Condo Pony

James Reichmuth: You may know what a terrible graffiti problem they had in the Pleistocene Era. And many of Europe's best caves have been defaced by stick figures. ... We have come up with a cave repainting set which just allows you, very handily and easily, to paint over these old caves and get them baby, room, or man-cave-ready. Folks, those horses are just doodles — lighten up.

Rob Baedeker: Designer pets are all the rage these days. Ours is called the Condo Pony. It's a little horse that just kind of clomps around the condo. The motto is: Condo doesn't have to mean no pony no more.

The Forever Diaper

"Never needs changing. Not once. ... Put this on when they're born, sit back, and watch the joy that every baby gives off." St. Martin's Press hide caption

itoggle caption St. Martin's Press

On the Forever Diaper

James Reichmuth: One of the things we're most excited about right now for new parents — and we worked with Russian scientists here, using blimp technology — is a — what we call — Forever Diaper. And that's a diaper that you put on at birth and it, technically, can stay on until early adolescence. We say: Let's take diapers off the table.

On the Personality Alert Bracelet

Baedeker: Most of us get into relationships of many types and it takes a long time to figure out the other person's character flaws. So we've designed a personality alert bracelet. It lets first responders or first dates really know about your issues. Whether you are a narcissist ... a martyr ... a baby ... it just cuts to the chase and just makes things much more efficient.

James Reichmuth: I wear one of these. I'm wearing one now. It just says: Tuna makes me sleepy. ... It's just something that you want people that are close to you to know. So I wouldn't eat tuna before an interview, for example, and I did not.

On SkyMall sometimes being funnier than SkyMaul

James Reichmuth: It is hard to out-SkyMall SkyMall.

Baedeker: Reality is a little bit ahead of us. ... It's that American tradition of giving you things you never knew you needed.

St. Martin's Press

At the moment, we're at yet another pivotal point in the history of home entertainment, which keeps changing with sudden — and major— tectonic shifts. Just ask Blockbuster Video: Videocassettes for home libraries gave way to DVDs, which now seem to be giving way to streaming video and the cloud.

Today's young consumers don't seem to want to possess physical copies of their favorite TV shows; they just want access to them wherever they can find them. So in what may be a last gasp for DVD collections, some of the new box-set releases are aimed at baby boomers and Gen X-ers — and are lavished with the kinds of extras, and extra care, that make a strong argument for purchasing them.

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On The Wonder Years, Kevin Arnold (Fred Savage) had a crush on his neighbor Winnie Cooper (Danica McKellar). Courtesy of Scoop Marketing hide caption

itoggle caption Courtesy of Scoop Marketing

On The Wonder Years, Kevin Arnold (Fred Savage) had a crush on his neighbor Winnie Cooper (Danica McKellar).

Courtesy of Scoop Marketing

The perfect example of this is StarVista and Time-Life's new set of The Wonder Years, the ABC sitcom that ran from 1988 to 1994. A really bad, misleadingly named single DVD called The Best of the Wonder Years was released 10 years after the series premiered in 1998 — but there's been nothing since, even though The Wonder Years is one of the most requested titles by DVD collectors. That's because the musical elements were a seminal part of that series, to set both the time and the mood, and the music rights for home-video release proved too complicated and expensive to acquire. But recent DVD releases of Freaks and Geeks, Veronica Mars and other series have proved that fans will pay extra for the original music, so this new Wonder Years set has acquired most of it. Not all, but the vast majority, and more than 100 of the 115 episodes are presented with all of the songs intact.

That's fabulous news. And the even more fabulous news is that The Wonder Years holds up so beautifully in every way. It stars Fred Savage as Kevin Arnold, a teenager coming of age in the late '60s and looking back on his life 20 years later in a narration provided by Daniel Stern.

“ The Wonder Years isn't dated at all. The music, the tone, the message, the nostalgia: Everything remains pitch-perfect.

Another 20 years have gone by since the series ended — Savage is old enough now to record his own middle-aged narration for the show — but The Wonder Years isn't dated at all. The music, the tone, the message, the nostalgia: Everything remains pitch-perfect. Like in the closing moments from the pilot episode when Kevin comforts and kisses his neighbor, Winnie Cooper: The music swells and the voice of the adult Kevin puts it all in perspective.

The Wonder Years set includes lots of extras and comes packaged in a miniature school locker with loads of goodies — but for me, the episodes are what matter, and it matters that they're presented so lovingly and so relatively complete.

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WKRP in Cincinnati originally ran on CBS from 1978 to 1982. The new collection contains most, but not all, of the original music. Courtesy of Sony Pictures Television hide caption

itoggle caption Courtesy of Sony Pictures Television

WKRP in Cincinnati originally ran on CBS from 1978 to 1982. The new collection contains most, but not all, of the original music.

Courtesy of Sony Pictures Television

Music rights also are at the heart of another new release this month: Shout! Factory's WKRP in Cincinnati: The Complete Series. Only the first season of this sitcom, which originally ran on CBS from 1978 to 1982, was released on DVD — and that was back in 2004, with much of its original music replaced. As with The Wonder Years, this new collection contains most, but not all, of the original music. But unlike The Wonder Years, which holds up superbly, WKRP in Cincinnati plays as a more dated viewing experience. But for those who remember it, and liked it, it's still an enjoyable one.

My favorite moment of all — based on an actual, very unfortunate radio promotion — had WKRP newsman Les Nessman reporting on a Thanksgiving Day stunt in which a station helicopter flew over a crowd and released a bunch of live turkeys — which, it turned out, couldn't fly. The live radio report by Nessman, played by Richard Sanders, was a disaster, just like the one involving the Hindenberg in the '20s.

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Paul Reubens played Pee-wee Herman on Pee-wee's Playhouse. Courtesy of Shout! Factory hide caption

itoggle caption Courtesy of Shout! Factory

Paul Reubens played Pee-wee Herman on Pee-wee's Playhouse.

Courtesy of Shout! Factory

Finally, also appearing this month on DVD, also from Shout! Factory, is The Complete Series: Pee-wee's Playhouse. This series was released on DVD 10 years ago, but now it's re-mastered, and available for the first time on Blu-ray. Many TV series don't benefit much from the enhanced sound and visuals of Blu-ray. But some do. Pushing Daisies. Twin Peaks. Breaking Bad. And, yes, Pee-wee's Playhouse, with Paul Reubens and his endlessly inventive take on a children's TV show. The visual restoration is brilliant and hearing the theme song will remind you of the show's manic, infectious energy.

David Bianculli is founder and editor of the website TV Worth Watching. He teaches TV and film history at Rowan University in New Jersey.

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